• Alien Nathan Edward@lemm.ee
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    2 months ago

    I’ve been reading Graeber’s Bullshit Jobs and evidently they don’t fire people in Japan. If they want rid of you, they just give you less and less to do until you’re sitting in the office all day getting paid to do nothing, and the cultural expectation is that you quit out of shame rather than just accepting money for nothing.

    • Norah - She/They@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      2 months ago

      I wonder if this also has something to do with the company itself avoiding shame too. Like firing an employee is a sign of weakness, that you hired someone like that in the first place? Or potentially a difference in benefits or a pension that they have to pay?

        • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet@lemmy.world
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          2 months ago

          Heh. I already am that, but I do have to work. It’s not as hard as when I was digging ditches for a living, but it’s definitely still work. Sometimes it’s slow, sometimes there’s a million things to do.

          • Alien Nathan Edward@lemm.ee
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            2 months ago

            I’ll be honest, I don’t know if I have to work. I do, because I like the work and I like the company I work for a lot, but I’m fairly confident that I could just show up to meetings twice a week and fudge paperwork for quite a while before anyone caught on that I’m just a hole they’re dumping money into.

      • lightnegative@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        It only works for cultures where individuals have to sepukku if they bring shame on family.

        In the USA, bringing shame upon family is considered a rite of passage so it doesn’t quite have the same effect